This Mom Had The Perfect Response When Her Daughter Called Her ‘FAT’ !!

Fat-shaming is common in our society.You can’t go five minutes these days without everybody chiming in on body acceptance, fat-shaming, or just expressing their opinion about what a human body should look like.The only solution for this is curbing it at ground level.Here’s an interesting story for instance.

A post shared by ALLIE Just Do You, Babe! (@allisonkimmey) on Jun 3, 2017 at 2:02pm PDT

After spending a fun day outdoor with her kids, Allison Kimmey, told them to come out of the pool as it was time to go home.

This made her daughter so upset and cranky that she told her brother that ‘mama is fat’. Kimmey instead of lashing out on her daughter did something commendable. She took them home and later sat them down for a talk.

In a very polite conversation, she taught her kids that “fat is not a bad word in our house”. Kimmey had no control over what goes outside her house, but she decided to put her foot down and teach her kids that they cannot insult people by calling them fat.

She shared her story on Instagram and it has gone extremely viral, with over 32k.

She wrote:

My daughter called me fat today.

She was upset I made them get out of the pool and she told her brother that mama is fat.

I told her to meet me upstairs so we could chat.

Me: “what did you say about me?”

Her: “I said you were fat, mama, im sorry”

Me: “let’s talk about it. The truth is, I am not fat. No one IS fat. It’s not something you can BE. But I do HAVE fat. We ALL have fat. It protects our muscles and our bones and keeps our bodies going by providing us energy. Do you have fat?”

Her: “yes! I have some here on my tummy”

Me: “that’s right! So do I and so does your brother!”

Her brother: “I don’t have any fat, I’m the skinniest, I just have muscles”

Me: “actually everyone, every single person in the world has fat. But each of us has different amounts.”

Her brother: ” oh right! I have some to protect my big muscles! But you have more than me”

Me: “Yes, that’s true. Some people have a lot, and others don’t have very much. But that doesn’t mean that one person is better than the other, do you both understand?

Both: “yes, mama”

Me: “so can you repeat what I said”

Them: “yes! I shouldn’t say someone is fat because you can’t be just fat, but everyone HAS fat and it’s okay to have different fat”

Me: “exactly right!”

Them: “can we go back to the pool now?”

Me: no

__________________

Each moment these topics come up i have to choose how I’m going to handle them. Fat is not a bad word in our house. If I shame my children for saying it then I am proving that it is an insulting word and I continue the stigma that being fat is unworthy, gross, comical and undesirable.

Since we don’t call people fat as an insult in my household, I have to assume she internalized this idea from somewhere or someone else. Our children are fed ideas from every angle, you have to understand that that WILL happen: at a friends house whose parents have different values, watching a tv show or movie, overhearing someone at school- ideas about body image are already filtering through their minds. It is our job to continue to be the loudest, most accepting, positive and CONSISTENT voice they hear. So that it can rise above the rest.